Thomas Flummer's SAO Digital Multimeter Puts a Functional Piece of Test Equipment on Your Badge

Powered by a Raspberry Pi RP2040, this clever badge add-on is a fully-functional multimeter with a selection of handy test features.

Electronics engineer Thomas Flummer has designed a badge add-on that could really get you out of a jam — delivering, as it does, a functional digital multimeter in a Simple Add-On (SAO) format.

"This is a digital multimeter with an SAO connector on the back, mode selection knob and test lead connections on the front," Flummer explains of his creation, the sensibly-named SAO Digital Multimeter. "Designed mainly as an assistive device during badge development, but also as an exploration of multifaceted engineering, combining electronics and mechanical design to have a relatively compact end product, that also looks right."

If you need an excuse to daily-carry your favorite badge, why not give it a working digital multimeter SAO? (📷: Thomas Flummer)

The Simple Add-On standard delivers a connector that makes it easy to build accessories for electronic event badges — with most delivering something like an addressable display, speaker, or simple some shiny LEDs. The SAO Digital Multimeter is different: while it does indeed deliver a small OLED display, it's also a fully-functional piece of test equipment.

Hidden inside the 3D-printed housing is a Raspberry Pi RP2040 microcontroller, some flash memory, and a power supply circuit capable of flicking between USB and badge power. A rotary encoder on the front, above two 2mm banana sockets for external probes, allows the meter's various functions to be selected: badge SAO voltage, LED/diode testing, continuity testing, I2C testing, general-purpose input/output (GPIO) testing, and resistance measurement.

The Raspberry Pi RP2040-powered gadget is built across two PCBs connected via pogo pins. (📷: Thomas Flummer)

"This is of course not the most precise measurement tool," Flummer admits, "but should get the job done for the simple stuff, like testing LEDs or checking a GPIO pin on the SAO connector."

More information is available on Flummer's Hackaday.io project page; KiCad project files and 3D print files are available on the project's GitHub repository under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

ghalfacree

Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.

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